It was said of President Gerald Ford that he couldn’t walk and chew gum at the same time.

Now, admittedly having a conversation on your mobile phone is slightly more complex than chewing gum, but it’s not really that difficult, is it?  So how come it is apparently such a challenge for so many people to walk along in a straight line at a constant speed whilst engaging in a conversation on their mobile phone? 

Admittedly most of my mobile phone conversations go something like this:

"Hello"

"I’m near (name of station)."

"About 30 minutes"

"Bye"

so walking and talking is not something that causes me too many problems.  Perhaps I’m not typical, but I’d hazard a guess that 99% of mobile phone conversations use only a small part of the brain, leaving plenty of spare capacity for controlling your limbs and processing visual information about where to go.  On the rare occasions that someone asks you a really difficult question (such as why Graeme Souness keeps getting offered jobs in football management) there’s always the option of stopping to think.  Especially if I’m walking nearby.   

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3 responses to “Walking and Talking”

  1. fumier avatar

    I think that for most people in Hong Kong making a phone call uses a larger part of the brain than for people elsewhere.

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  2. qe2 avatar
    qe2

    I think the mobile phone is irrelevant. Most people in HK simply lack any kind of spatial awareness! They can’t walk in a straight line and often just walk at 90 degrees in front of you as if you don’t exist – but perhaps that’s their intention – bloody gweilo’s!

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  3. Foster avatar

    On the phone, off the phone, people in this city can not walk in a straight line at an acceptable speed. Full stop.

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